By Oweyegha-Afunaduula
This article argues that electoral manipulation in Uganda is not a series of ad hoc irregularities but a predictable outcome of a political system deliberately architected since 1986. The process began with the constitutional dismantling of alternative power centres and the creation of a hyper-presidency, followed by the systematic “bantustanisation” of the political landscape.
The paper categorises the mechanisms of electoral theft into four phases: pre-election structural manipulation, campaign-period violence and intimidation, voting-day fraud, and post-vote judicial and institutional sanction.
Using Uganda as a primary case study, the analysis demonstrates how incumbent regimes embed electoral advantage into the state’s very fabric, making democracy a managed exercise in regime renewal rather than a contest for power. The impending 2026 elections serve as a prospective case to test this established model.
The Contradiction of Liberation
In January 2026, Ugandans will once again go to the polls in a ritual that has come to define the nation’s politics: a high-stakes electoral contest whose outcome is widely anticipated, not because of its competitiveness, but due to the pervasive understanding of its predetermined nature. The incumbent, President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, who has held power for nearly four decades, will seek yet another term. This paper posits that his expected victory will not be a product of genuine popular acclaim alone but the inevitable result of a comprehensive, state-managed system of electoral authoritarianism.
This system finds its roots in a foundational contradiction. The National Resistance Movement (NRM) government came to power in 1986 following a protracted guerrilla war, justified in part by the need to restore “electoral democracy” after the disputed 1980 polls.
However, upon assuming power, the movement exhibited a deep-seated distrust of unfettered electoral politics. Having been rejected at the ballot box in 1980 under the banner of the Uganda Patriotic Movement (UPM) and led by cadres who often hailed from exogenous communities outside the constitutionally recognised indigenous groups, the NRM elite prioritised consolidation over competition.
The ensuing decades have seen the construction of a political edifice where elections are held regularly but are systematically engineered to perpetuate the incumbent’s rule. This paper traces the historical genesis of this system, taxonomises its operational mechanisms, and applies this framework to forecast the dynamics of the 2026 elections. It concludes that without a fundamental reconfiguration of the constitutional and institutional order, Ugandan elections will remain instruments of power preservation rather than expressions of popular sovereignty.
Historical Genesis: From Bush War to Constitutional Consolidation of Power
The critical juncture in establishing Uganda’s current electoral architecture was the constitution-making process (1989-1995). President Museveni initially advocated for a “no-party” or “Movement” system, arguing that political parties—blamed for Uganda’s sectarian violence—should remain in abeyance. A gentleman’s agreement was cited to justify this political monopoly.
A Constitutional Commission, chaired by Justice Benjamin Odoki, was tasked with collecting public views. Its findings, however, presented a problem for the new regime. As noted by former commissioner Sam Njuba, a significant majority (reportedly 65%) of Ugandans submitted a preference for a federal system (federo), particularly the powerful kingdom of Buganda. This vision deviated sharply from the NRM’s desire for a centralised, unimpeded executive authority.
The regime’s response was decisive. According to insider accounts, a secretive committee of “eight wise men” was appointed to redraft the commission’s report, systematically excising provisions that threatened centralised control. The resultant 1995 Constitution, promulgated by a Constituent Assembly operating under the NRM’s shadow, became the legal bedrock for perpetual incumbency. Its key features include:
*The Imperial Presidency: It invested overwhelming executive, appointive, and even legislative powers in the office of the President, creating what scholars term a “hyper-presidency”.
*The Neutralisation of Traditional Authority: Article 246 reduced the once-powerful kingdoms and the Busoga chiefdom to mere “cultural institutions”, stripping them of political and administrative power and eliminating potential rival poles of influence.
*Demographic Re-engineering: The controversial insertion of “Banyarwanda” as an indigenous group, a move seen by critics as expanding the regime’s political base, underscored the constitution’s role as a tool for political engineering rather than a reflection of an organic social contract.
This constitutional coup de grâce established the rules of the game: all subsequent electoral contests would be played on a field heavily tilted in favour of the incumbent. The return to multiparty politics in 2005 did not level this field; it merely forced the opposition to compete within a system fundamentally designed for their defeat.
A Taxonomy of Electoral Manipulation in Uganda
The stealing of elections in Uganda is a holistic process, encompassing actions long before and well after polling day. We categorise these mechanisms into four interrelated phases.
A. Pre-Election Structural and Legal Manipulation
This is the most profound layer, determining the playing field itself.
*The Partisan Electoral Commission: The President exclusively appoints the Electoral Commission (EC), ensuring its leadership and staff are NRM cadres. This compromises every subsequent action, from voter registration to final result declaration.
*A Captive Judiciary: The President’s stated policy of appointing “NRM cadres” to the bench to “fight corruption” has, in effect, politicised the judiciary. Judges ruling against the state in sensitive political cases face career marginalisation, ensuring the legal system sanctions electoral theft.
*Candidate Disqualification: The EC and courts routinely use technicalities to disqualify viable opposition candidates, as seen with the blocking of several hopefuls from the 2021 presidential race.
*Gerrymandering and “Bantustanisation”: The continuous creation of new districts (from 33 in 1986 to over 136 today) fragments opposition strongholds, dilutes ethnic cohesion, and creates new constituencies where state patronage can determine outcomes. It is a political strategy disguised as administrative decentralisation.
*Voter Register Manipulation: The perennial issues of ghost voters, the inclusion of minors, and the delayed or opaque release of registers to opposition parties undermine the integrity of the voter roll from the outset.
B. Campaign Period Manipulation: The Militarisation of Politics
The campaign period transforms from a contest of ideas into a demonstration of raw state power and institutional bias.
*The Security Apparatus as a Political Tool: The Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) and the increasingly militarised Uganda Police Force (UPF) cease to be neutral arbiters. Their central role, as you noted, is to “cause fear to the electorate and to militarise the campaign trails of Opposition candidates.” Opposition rallies are routinely blocked, dispersed with tear gas and live ammunition, or subjected to obstructive and legally ambiguous last-minute “cancellations” by the police.
*Deployment of Intelligence and Administrators: As you highlighted, Resident District Commissioners (RDCs), Internal Security Organisation (ISO) officers, and other local state agents become active political operatives. In areas perceived as opposition strongholds, they harass candidates, intimidate supporters, and create a climate of apprehension that suppresses mobilisation.
*Asymmetric Access to Resources: The state treasury, public media (like UBC), and government logistical assets (vehicles, venues) become extensions of the NRM campaign. The opposition operates with severe financial and logistical constraints, while the incumbent’s campaign is bankrolled by state resources, blurring the line between government and party.
*Information Warfare: This includes biased state media coverage, state-sponsored propaganda, and the strategic use of internet shutdowns or social media throttling—as seen in the 2016 and 2021 elections—to disrupt opposition communication, mobilise their base, and obscure reports of irregularities.
Voting Day Fraud: The Execution of Theft
On polling day, the theoretical opportunity for a free choice is systematically undermined by a range of overt and clandestine actions.
*Ballot Paper Manipulation: This includes vote stuffing in NRM strongholds, pre-ticking ballot papers before distribution, and the establishment of illegal voting stations in security installations or NRM-linked offices where results are fabricated.
*Biometric Voter Machine (BVM) Manipulation: The irregular and opaque introduction of BVMs, without adequate testing or public trust, created new avenues for failure. Machines can “technically fail” in opposition areas, causing long delays and disenfranchisement, while their central servers remain under the exclusive control of the partisan EC.
*Voter Suppression and Confusion: Tactics include deliberately sending voters to wrong polling stations, late opening of polling stations in opposition areas, and the presence of intimidating security personnel at stations. The EC’s last-minute changes to polling station locations add to deliberate confusion.
*Compromised Electoral Officials: As you vividly described, presiding officers and polling assistants engage in miscounting votes (e.g., “throwing opposition votes under their legs”) and illegally altering Declaration of Results (DR) forms. The integrity of the individual citizen’s act of voting is violated at the point of counting.
Post-Voting Manipulation: The Sanction of Theft
The theft is finalised and legitimised after the polls close.
*The “Tally Center Coup”: At the National Tally Centre, the process lacks transparency. Legally required DR forms from polling stations are often disregarded in favour of handwritten, unaudited “summary” sheets brought by EC officials or security agents. This allows for the wholesale changing of results from entire constituencies.
*Ballot Box Interference: The physical exchange of ballot boxes between polling stations and during transit to tally centres remains a persistent risk, especially where security forces escorting the boxes are complicit.
*Judicial Sanction: The judiciary, already compromised, completes the cycle. Election petitions face overwhelming procedural hurdles, the standard of proof is set impossibly high, and key evidence is often dismissed on technicalities. The judiciary’s role becomes one of providing legal finality to a politically determined outcome, as observed in the dismissal of the 2021 presidential election petition. Judges who show independence are sidelined or forced out.
Illustrative Case Studies: The Evolution of a System
*1996 and 2001: Establishing the Template. The first multiparty elections under the 1995 Constitution were held under a de facto “Movement” system, with the opposition legally barred from campaigning as parties. State resources and security forces were fully deployed for the incumbent. The 2001 election saw an escalation, with the main opponent, Dr Kizza Besigye, facing severe intimidation and arbitrary arrest on treason charges after contesting the results.
*2011 and 2016: Refining the Machinery. The return to multipartyism saw the tactics become more sophisticated. The 2011 election was preceded by the “Walk-to-Work” protests and brutal crackdowns, setting a tone of intimidation. The 2016 election was marked by the controversial first use of BVMs, a heavily biased EC, and a state of near-total information blackout on polling day due to an enforced social media shutdown.
*2021: The Apex of Militarised Control. The 2021 election represents the most overt fusion of military and electoral power. The campaign was characterised by unprecedented violence, including the November 2020 massacre in Luweero and the militarised siege of opposition candidate Robert Kyagulanyi’s (Bobi Wine) campaigns. On election day, the internet was completely shut down. The outcome was a foregone conclusion, and the subsequent legal challenge was summarily dismissed by the Supreme Court. The EC’s conduct and the security forces’ role demonstrated the full maturation of the system you have described.
The 2026 Elections: A Forecast Based on Past Patterns
· Structural: The same EC is in place; the judiciary remains unchanged.
· Pre-Election: Intimidation of civil society, potential fresh disqualification threats to candidates, ongoing “bantustanisation” through new administrative units.
· Campaign Period: Expect heightened militarisation of campaigns, especially in the Buganda region and other opposition strongholds.
· Voting Day: Likely repeat of internet interference, BVM “glitches”, and intimidation.
The 2026 Elections: A Forecast Based on Past Patterns
As Uganda approaches the January 15, 2026, general elections, the patterns established over four decades provide a reliable template for forecasting. The mechanisms of electoral authoritarianism are not dormant but are being actively primed within their pre-existing structural channels. An examination of the current pre-electoral environment reveals the system in its preparatory phase.
Pre-Election Structural & Legal Manipulation in Motion:
The foundational architecture remains intact. The Electoral Commission, chaired by Justice Simon Byabakama, retains public scepticism due to its performance in 2021 and its unchanged composition as a presidential appointee. The judiciary has seen no transformative renewal. Furthermore, the process of “bantustanisation” continues apace. The creation of new cities (e.g., Jinja, Arua, and Gulu) and the ongoing debate over the creation of more districts (like the proposed Terego District) serve to redraw political boundaries, diluting opposition cohesion and creating new arenas for patronage. Voter register audits by opposition parties will likely again reveal anomalies—ghost voters, transfers, and registrations of minors—that the EC will dismiss or address opaquely.
Campaign Period: Prepping the Militarised Landscape:
The campaign period is anticipated to be the most militarised and violent yet. The state’s response to the 2020/2021 election protests, which saw over 150 people killed by security forces, established a new threshold for repression. Opposition candidates, particularly those from the National Unity Platform (NUP) and the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC), can expect a replay of the 2021 tactics: obstructive permit denials for rallies, violent dispersal of gatherings, and targeted arrests of candidates and agents on charges ranging from incitement to treason. The role of RDCs, ISO, and the newly vigilant Crime Preventers-style structures will be critical in applying localised pressure.
Voting Day: Scripted Irregularities:
The technical and procedural flaws will follow a known script. Internet shutdowns or severe throttling are highly probable, framed as a “national security” measure to prevent the spread of “false information”. The Biometric Voter Verification (BVM) system will remain a point of vulnerability; “technical failures” are likely to be disproportionately reported in opposition strongholds, leading to long queues and effective disenfranchisement. The presence of plain-clothed security personnel in and around polling stations will heighten the climate of fear. Furthermore, the confusion of voter locations—a perennial issue—may be exacerbated by last-minute EC directives.
Post-Voting: The Inevitable Sanction:
The post-election phase is the most predictable. Any outcome contrary to the incumbent’s victory will be impossible under the current architecture. The National Tally Centre will again operate as a black box. Legally mandated DR forms will be contested, with the EC relying on its own aggregated figures. Should the opposition mount a legal challenge, the judiciary, bound by its own precedents from the 2001, 2006, 2016, and 2021 petitions, will almost certainly affirm the EC’s declared results, citing the high burden of proof and the “sanctity” of the electoral process as administered.
In essence, the 2026 elections are not a pending contest but a ritual of renewal for a system designed for self-preservation. The outcome is predetermined not by a secret plot but by the open, operational logic of the political architecture built since 1995.
Conclusion
Uganda’s case study demonstrates that the most profound form of electoral theft occurs not on polling day, but in the years and decades prior, through the constitutional and institutional capture of the state itself. Elections become expensive, violent ceremonies that authenticate a pre-ordained political order rather than instruments of democratic choice.
The return to multiparty politics in 2005 did not democratise Uganda; it merely forced the authoritarian system to adapt, donning the cloak of pluralism while retaining its monolithic core. The opposition is permitted to exist, but not to win; to participate, but not to alter the fundamental distribution of power. This is the essence of electoral authoritarianism.
For God and My Country
Prof. Oweyegha-Afunaduula is a conservation biologist and the Center for Critical Thinking and Alternative Analysis.


